Teaching Students with Incarcerated Parents

Research on children with incarcerated parents has yielded several insights that educators may find useful. In this article, the author highlights three insights from her personal experience: (1) Although having an incarcerated father is the more common experience, having an incarcerated mother is e...

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Veröffentlicht in:American educator 2019-06, Vol.43 (2), p.24
1. Verfasser: Lloyd, Tracey Shollenberger
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description Research on children with incarcerated parents has yielded several insights that educators may find useful. In this article, the author highlights three insights from her personal experience: (1) Although having an incarcerated father is the more common experience, having an incarcerated mother is especially likely to disrupt children's everyday lives; (2) Maintaining contact with an incarcerated parent is associated with positive outcomes for children as well as parents, but doing so can be challenging; and (3) Parental incarceration is just one piece of a larger concern: students are growing up in an era of an expanded criminal justice system that shapes not only their day-to-day lives, but also their perceptions of what is possible for their futures. The author closes by advising that in communities where incarceration is common, schools would do well to recognize the extent of the problem, be mindful of challenging dynamics when engaging with students' families, and consider spearheading schoolwide efforts to meet the needs of children with incarcerated loved ones.
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subjects Children of prisoners
Cities and towns
Classroom management
Classroom techniques
Education
Education, Secondary
High school teachers
High school teaching
Humor
Institutionalized Persons
Methods
Parent Child Relationship
Parent Participation
Parents
Practice
Prisoners
Resilience (Psychology)
School Role
Secondary education
Self Expression
Social aspects
Student Needs
Teacher-student relations
Teacher-student relationships
Teachers
Teaching
Youth Programs
title Teaching Students with Incarcerated Parents
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